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The New Orleans of George Washington Cable: The 1887 Census Office Report
220
by Lawrence N. Powell (Editor)
Lawrence N. Powell
The New Orleans of George Washington Cable: The 1887 Census Office Report
220
by Lawrence N. Powell (Editor)
Lawrence N. Powell
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Overview
A pioneering local-color writer about Creole New Orleans and a public advocate for black equality in his native South during and after Reconstruction, George Washington Cable (18441925) depicted in his writing the clash between American newcomers and a quaint but proud French-speaking population in postLouisiana Purchase New Orleans. His work, including the short-story collection Old Creole Days (1879) and his most famous novel, The Grandissimes (1880), received widespread critical acclaim and was serialized in the country's best highbrow magazines. In 1880, Cable was commissioned to write a "historical sketch" of preCivil War New Orleans for a special section of the Tenth U. S. Census. Although subsequently revised and published as Creoles of Louisiana, Cable's original piece never appeared in print again except as a facsimile reprint. With The New Orleans of George Washington Cable, Lawrence N. Powell presents this rare text in its entirety for the first time, including Cable's copious footnotes and other material deleted from the original census publication by its editors.
Likened by northern critics to Nathaniel Hawthorne and Bret Harte, Cable was already a literary sensation by the time he undertook the census project. He approached writing history as seriously as he did writing fiction, and he attacked his new challenge with vigor. Instead of the "sketch" he was asked to provide, Cable turned in 313 pages of meticulously documented history complete with 647 footnotes on everything from the origins of the city and its role in the Indian wars to the effect of West Indian immigration, the War of 1812, and commercial expansion through the mid-nineteenth century. He used sources in English, French, and Spanish, drawing on published histories, early maps, official surveys, travel accounts, medical journals, sanitation reports, city ordinances, American State Papers, city directories, and the New Orleansbased DeBow's Review a treasure trove of history, journalism, and useful statistics for his lively account of the Crescent City.
In an invaluable introduction to Cable's text, Powell illuminates the circumstances surrounding Cable's turn to historical writing and sheds new light on his controversial relations with white Creoles. Cable's forays into Creole culture aroused considerable hostility, as Powell ably demonstrates in his analysis of Cable's rivalry with Creole historian Charles Gayarré. Although Cable's vocal support for full civil rights for African Americans eventually forced him to leave New Orleans for Massachusetts, he continued to write novels, stories, and nonfiction about the Crescent City and the South. As Powell shows in his introduction, Cable's vast historical research fundamentally influenced both his development as a writer and his evolution as a political reformer.
Likened by northern critics to Nathaniel Hawthorne and Bret Harte, Cable was already a literary sensation by the time he undertook the census project. He approached writing history as seriously as he did writing fiction, and he attacked his new challenge with vigor. Instead of the "sketch" he was asked to provide, Cable turned in 313 pages of meticulously documented history complete with 647 footnotes on everything from the origins of the city and its role in the Indian wars to the effect of West Indian immigration, the War of 1812, and commercial expansion through the mid-nineteenth century. He used sources in English, French, and Spanish, drawing on published histories, early maps, official surveys, travel accounts, medical journals, sanitation reports, city ordinances, American State Papers, city directories, and the New Orleansbased DeBow's Review a treasure trove of history, journalism, and useful statistics for his lively account of the Crescent City.
In an invaluable introduction to Cable's text, Powell illuminates the circumstances surrounding Cable's turn to historical writing and sheds new light on his controversial relations with white Creoles. Cable's forays into Creole culture aroused considerable hostility, as Powell ably demonstrates in his analysis of Cable's rivalry with Creole historian Charles Gayarré. Although Cable's vocal support for full civil rights for African Americans eventually forced him to leave New Orleans for Massachusetts, he continued to write novels, stories, and nonfiction about the Crescent City and the South. As Powell shows in his introduction, Cable's vast historical research fundamentally influenced both his development as a writer and his evolution as a political reformer.
Product Details
ISBN-13: | 9780807133194 |
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Publisher: | Louisiana State University Press |
Publication date: | 06/01/2008 |
Pages: | 220 |
Product dimensions: | 5.50(w) x 8.40(h) x 0.70(d) |
About the Author
Lawrence N. Powell is the author or editor of numerous books, including Reconstructing Louisiana, volume 6, and Troubled Memory: Anne Levy, the Holocaust, and David Duke's Louisiana, winner of the Kemper and Leila Williams Award. A professor of history at Tulane University, he lives in the New Orleans area.
Table of Contents
Maps ix
Introduction: A Novelist Turns Historian 1
Cable's "Historical Sketch"
Site and Origin 38
Population and Social Order 40
Indian Wars 47
The First Creoles 51
The Insurrection of 1768 60
The Superior Council and the Cabildo 70
Spanish Conciliation 77
The Creoles Still Frenc 84
The American Grasp 94
A Franco-Spanish American City 102
From Subjects to Citizens 111
Burr's Conspiracy 116
The West Indian Immigration 120
The War of 1812-15 125
Commercial Expansion-1815 to 1840 138
Positive Growth with Comparative Decline 149
Cable's Notes to "Historical Sketch" 181
Works Cited by Cable 199
Index 203
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